Foles was standing still, facing the ball, as easy of a pitch and catch as there possibly is. Brady was running a wheel route?! for some reason, on a ball that was leading him a bit too much. But everyone acts like they were the exact same throw/difficulty.

This was ordained as soon as Republicans took the Whitehouse. This is a predetermined vote by an unelected regulatory body chaired by someone paid to do exactly what he is doing today. Elections have consequences and both parties are not the same.

I tell myself ahead of time. I warn myself. I cajole myself not to get upset, not to get my hopes up, not to get set up for disappointment, not to let the inevitable unlucky bounce or bad call piss me off. Now I just wish I didn't feel at all. Heart goes out to the players. Throw another log on the fire.

As of today ISPs are required by law to not favor or impede traffic (i.e. data packets) across their network. Removing this law legally allows the ISP monopolies to make whatever decisions they want about what websites will load quickly and which ones will load slowly or not at all.

Do you really trust Comcast to have you (the consumer's) best interests in mind when curating your web experience?

The question really comes down to - is the internet an information super highway free from bias and control (i.e. a utility)? Or is it the private sandbox of the ISP monopolies?

I know which internet I want to have and which one would be a nightmare to deal with.

Iowa just put up a season high 250 yards on 6.5 ypc against OSU. They were averaging 3 yards a carry for the first eight games against pitiful competition. The blueprint is there to run on the Buckeyes.

If I'm reading that right then as much as I don't think of him as a passing attack coach, Lloyd Carr (outside of his first and final seasons) only had a single game where Michigan didn't eclipse 100 yards passing.